Tickle, Phyllis: The Night Offices: Prayers for the Hours From Sunset to Sunrise
Oxford University Press, NY 2006

Enneagram

We are including some books on the Enneagram in this list. Although, some reject its wisdom as they believe it comes from
outside the Christian tradition and is, therefore, invalid for us, others argue that they can trace it back past its use in the Sufi community to the desert
fathers and mothers themselves. We have included these resources because Mentors who have knowledge in this area have found that if one can hear
which intelligence others live in, one can better frame questions.†

Basically, the Enneagram is a 9-point model of integration.† It is based on the understanding that we have three "intelligences", that of our bodies
(practical), that of our hearts (relational) and that of our minds (intellectual).† Every person operates from a strength, and every person has a blind spot,
or weak area. The work is to know what point we live from, understand our strengths and the compulsions that hurt us, and then work to grow into a
more secure, whole person, with the aid of the other points.

Hurley, K and Donson T: My Best Self: Using the Enneagram to Free the Soul
Harper Collins Press, New York, 1993.

Riso, Don Richard: Enneagram Transformations
Houghton Mifflin Co, Boston 1993. Applies Enneagram wisdom with affirmations of those things we need to grow in, and offers release for those things that
create distress and dis-ease in us

Our thanks to a group of Mentors in the Diocese of New Westminster, and others, who have so graciously shared these resources on
personal spirituality. Come back often to look for new additions. Please feel free to offer additional material for this page. Send an E-mail to the
WebMaster